Book Image

WebGL Beginner's Guide

Book Image

WebGL Beginner's Guide

Overview of this book

WebGL is a new web technology that brings hardware-accelerated 3D graphics to the browser without installing additional software. As WebGL is based on OpenGL and brings in a new concept of 3D graphics programming to web development, it may seem unfamiliar to even experienced Web developers.Packed with many examples, this book shows how WebGL can be easy to learn despite its unfriendly appearance. Each chapter addresses one of the important aspects of 3D graphics programming and presents different alternatives for its implementation. The topics are always associated with exercises that will allow the reader to put the concepts to the test in an immediate manner.WebGL Beginner's Guide presents a clear road map to learning WebGL. Each chapter starts with a summary of the learning goals for the chapter, followed by a detailed description of each topic. The book offers example-rich, up-to-date introductions to a wide range of essential WebGL topics, including drawing, color, texture, transformations, framebuffers, light, surfaces, geometry, and more. With each chapter, you will "level up"ù your 3D graphics programming skills. This book will become your trustworthy companion filled with the information required to develop cool-looking 3D web applications with WebGL and JavaScript.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
WebGL Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Authors
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

About the Authors

Diego Hernando Cantor Rivera is a Software Engineer born in 1980 in Bogota, Colombia. Diego completed his undergraduate studies in 2002 with the development of a computer vision system that tracked the human gaze as a mechanism to interact with computers.

Later on, in 2005, he finished his master's degree in Computer Engineering with emphasis in Software Architecture and Medical Imaging Processing. During his master's studies, Diego worked as an intern at the imaging processing laboratory CREATIS in Lyon, France and later on at the Australian E-Health Research Centre in Brisbane, Australia.

Diego is currently pursuing a PhD in Biomedical Engineering at Western University in London, Canada, where he is involved in the development augmented reality systems for neurosurgery.

When Diego is not writing code, he enjoys singing, cooking, travelling, watching a good play, or bodybuilding.

Diego speaks Spanish, English, and French.